Examples of Telecommunication Regulations in a sentence
This treaty negotiation will conduct a review of the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs), the general principles which relate to traditional international voice telecommunication services.
South Africa is a signatory to the International Telecommunications Regulations that were concluded at the World Administrative Telegraph and Telephone Conference, Melbourne 1988 (the Melbourne ITR) as well as the International Telecommunication Regulations that were concluded at the World Conference on International Telecommunication held in Dubai in 2012 (effective 2015) (Dubai ITR).
In accordance with Article 4 "Instruments of the Union" of the ITU Constitution, the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs) are one of the two Administrative Regulations included in the list of Instruments of the Union (paragraph 29 of the Constitution).
Busan, 2014), the ITU Council, at its 2016 Session, adopted Resolution 1379, which resolves that an Expert Group on the International Telecommunication Regulations (EG‑ITRs), open to all Member States and Sector Members, be created.
The ITU Constitution and the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITR) emphasize the sovereignty of ITU Member States in organizing their telecommunication sectors.
Other states, especially China and Russia, advocate for Internet governance to come under inter-governmental control by formal rules.As global communications developed, global bodies instituted mechanisms to govern them, including the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs), a binding treaty adopted in 1988 by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).229 The ITRs came up for amendment in December 2012 at the ITU’s World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT).
Busan, 2014), the ITU Council, at its 2016 Session, adopted Resolution 1379, which resolves that an Expert Group on the International Telecommunication Regulations (EG‑ITRs), open to all Member States and Sector Members, be created.
Comment: The proposed amendment does not make provision for any future International Telecommunication Regulations.
NOTE – For relations between countries who regard call-back as an "international telecommunication service" as defined in the International Telecommunication Regulations, bilateral operating agreements should be required between the operating agencies authorized by Member States concerned as to the conditions under which call-back will be operated.
The ‘World Conference on International Telecommunications’ (WCIT), a treaty-making negotiation to review the 1988 ITU’s International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs), will take place in Dubai in December 2012.Given the involvement and role of Member States in the ITU, the ITRs revision represents a highly political debate.